Tablet Magazine

Two Jews Walk Into a Bar

A Berlin-based comedy duo takes on antisemitism through humor—in clubs and online—winning fans from New York to Tehran

When Adam Shor told his father—the son of a Holocaust survivor—about Two Jews, his comedy act in Berlin, his father said they should change the name. He believed that it was better for Jews to keep quiet about their identity. “I’d say, ‘Come on, what the fuck are you talking about?’” Shor said, “it’s over.” Shor was trying to reassure his father not to worry about antisemitism anymore. But in the wake of the Oct. 7 attack on Israel, the war in Gaza, and a resurgence of antisemitism all over the world, Shor has had to rethink that answer. Shor, 39, and his comedy partner, Eyal Wartelsky, 27, started performing together 4 1/2 years ago. The decision to call themselves Two Jews started as a joke. “It felt like the beginning of every Jew joke you ever heard,” said Shor. “‘Two Jews walk into a bar …’” Though it works as a setup, “Two Jews” was never their punchline; Shor and Wartelsky don’t deliver “Jewish humor” a la Jackie Mason. Instead, they’ve built their act around a hybrid of standup, original music, improvised songs, and dark humor. But even if Jewish humor doesn’t characterize their act, the fact that they’re Jewish, and advertise this identity in their name, affects them, their comedy, and the way audiences react. Shor and Wartelsky say they’ve had audience members walk out on them recently after being introduced as Two Jews—although that also happened before Oct. 7. They’ve gone onstage following comedians who deliver antisemitic material, like one who called Jews “crybabies” a few days after the Oct. 7 attacks. And they’ve had online content removed from their social media channels. ...

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Tablet’s First Personal

A call for submissions: Belonging

Tablet Magazine is seeking submissions of personal essays about belonging. Finalists will receive a cash prize and a spot at a live literary event in New York City; the winning essay will earn $500 and will be published in Tablet. For full details and deadlines, click here.

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Tablet talks about Judaism a lot, but sometimes we like to change the subject. Maggie Phillips covers religious communities across the U.S.—from Christians to Muslims, Hindus to Baha’i, Jehovah’s Witnesses to pagans—to find out what they’re talking about.

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Unorthodox

Poison Ivy

Covering the anti-Israel protests at Columbia with students, professors, and New York City Mayor Eric Adams

May 2, 2024

Zionism: The Tablet Guide

The definitive guide to the past, present, and future of modern Judaism’s most fantastical and magnetic idea—and the West’s most explosive political label.

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On Abortion

The Tab

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Roundtables on the state of the American Jewish community, bringing together people from a shared demographic or background—everyday people with personal opinions, not experts who earn their salaries discussing these issues.

Photographic illustration by Barry Downard/Debut; portait of Black: Nechama Jacobson; original photo of Bob Dylan © Barry Feinstein Photography, Inc. Used with permission from The Estate of Barry Feinstein
Photographic illustration by Barry Downard/Debut; portait of Black: Nechama Jacobson; original photo of Bob Dylan © Barry Feinstein Photography, Inc. Used with permission from The Estate of Barry Feinstein
The New Jews

A montage of iconic moments from the Jewish past points the way to a Jewish future—one driven by a generation of new voices

At least Ruth didn’t have to fret about social media. The only thing this Moabite woman, arguably the world’s first convert to Judaism—and ancestor of one King David—had to do was hold on to her mother-in-law and promise to go whither the older woman went. She wasn’t expected to share photos of her challah rising on Instagram, defend Israel on Twitter, bare her soul on Substack, or cultivate small communities of followers on Facebook. Her journey was decidedly private, intimate, all but forgotten if it weren’t for the Bible’s author peeking in and recording the grandeur of her experience for posterity. Today, we have a new class of Ruths, only this time many of them are trying to negotiate some of the most profound and pressing questions facing Jews—about identity and belonging, about money and politics, about making friends and losing faith—along with public or semipublic profiles. They are new Jews, but—if we are lucky—they will be among the most important Jews in the coming years. To illustrate the role we believe Jews-by-choice are increasingly playing in the American Jewish future, we matched each of our interviewees with an iconic image from the recent American past. Because every religious evolution is a conversion—every day brings with it the possibility of changing in ways until now unexpected—the stories these men and women tell us are particularly meaningful, and their wisdom so keenly appreciated. There are, to be sure, many more who share their trajectory, but here, in their own words, are some thoughts from these visible and inspiring people making their journey back home to Judaism. ...

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An ‘Unorthodox’ Celebration of Conversion

Listen to five years of deeply moving personal stories, audio diaries, and reported segments about Jews by choice around the world

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Encyclopedia

conversion

[kən-ˈvɜr-ʒən] noun

There have always been converts to Judaism. If we follow Torah and say that Abraham was the first Jew, then his wife, Sarah, was the first c...

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